Reconnection in a rotation-dominated magnetosphere and its relation to Saturn's auroral dynamics

Cowley, S. W. H. and Badman, Sarah V. and Bunce, E. J. and Clarke, J. T. and Gérard, J.-c. and Grodent, Denis and Jackman, Caitriona M. and Milan, S. E. and Yeoman, T. K. (2005) Reconnection in a rotation-dominated magnetosphere and its relation to Saturn's auroral dynamics. Journal of Geophysical Research, 110 (A2): A02201. ISSN 0148-0227

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Abstract

The first extended series of observations of Saturn's auroral emissions, undertaken by the Hubble Space Telescope in January 2004 in conjunction with measurements of the upstream solar wind and interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) by the Cassini spacecraft, have revealed a strong auroral response to the interplanetary medium. Following the arrival of the forward shock of a corotating interaction region compression, bright auroras were first observed to expand significantly poleward in the dawn sector such that the area of the polar cap was much reduced, following which the auroral morphology evolved into a spiral structure around the pole. We propose that these auroral effects are produced by compression-induced reconnection of a significant fraction of the open flux present in Saturn's open tail lobes, as has also been observed to occur at Earth, followed by subcorotation of the newly closed flux tubes in the outer magnetosphere region due to the action of the ionospheric torque. We show that the combined action of reconnection and rotation naturally gives rise to spiral structures on newly opened and newly closed field lines, the latter being in the same sense as observed in the auroral images. The magnetospheric corollary of the dynamic scenario outlined here is that corotating interaction region-induced magnetospheric compressions and tail collapses should be accompanied by hot plasma injection into the outer magnetosphere, first in the midnight and dawn sector, and second at increasing local times via noon and dusk. We discuss how this scenario leads to a strong correlation of auroral and related disturbances at Saturn with the dynamic pressure of the solar wind, rather than to a correlation with the north-south component of the IMF as observed at Earth, even though the underlying physics is similar, related to the transport of magnetic flux to and from the tail in the Dungey cycle.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Journal of Geophysical Research
Additional Information:
Copyright 2005 by the American Geophysical Union.
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1900/1901
Subjects:
?? planetary magnetospheressaturn's aurorassaturn's magnetospheresolar wind-magnetosphere couplingearth and planetary sciences (miscellaneous)geophysicsatmospheric sciencespace and planetary science ??
ID Code:
67100
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
11 Oct 2013 09:24
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
21 Nov 2024 01:26